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February 28, 2007

Answerlink: Information for the Speed of Life

Answerlink is a great Web-based resources for easy access to Cooperative Extension information--online 24 hours a day/seven days a week.

The information is designed for Colorado situations. The site provides a way for people to search for frequently asked questions, ask a question, or just browse helpful information on a variety of topics. With the "my info" part of the site users can log in and check the status of a question.

Do you want to know...
How to prune roses?
How to prepare your soil for a perennial garden?
How to find out more information about Colorado noxious weeds?

Answerlink can help.

Colorado Cooperative Extension Home
Cooperative Extension--Your front door to the research, information and expertise of your land-grant university.

Information for the blog entree comes from the Answerlink homepage and the Colorado Cooperative Extension site.

February 27, 2007

National Agricultural Digital Library Design

The National Agricultural Library (NAL) is pleased to announce the launch of a design concept Web site - www.nal.usda.gov/ndla - for the National Digital Library for Agriculture (NDLA). NAL would appreciate receiving your comments and suggestions concerning the site, which will be available for the next several months, as NAL continues to work closely with our customers, partners, and stakeholders to collectively develop the National Digital Library for Agriculture. Please visit www.nal.usda.gov/ndla and share your comments with us via the Contact Us button.

The design concept Web site was developed to demonstrate the following major NDLA goals:

- To establish the NDLA as a collaborative partnership-based initiative;
- To provide easy and quick searching of databases as well as Web sites relevant to agriculture
- To highlight information available from an array of partnering institutions
- To provide access to a wide variety of information types and resources such as Web sites, databases, weather information, genetic data, images and photographs, citation information, statistics, advice, and the full texts of digital publications

Many thanks go to those partnering with NAL in the launch of this NDLA design concept site, including the AgNIC Alliance, the Science.gov Alliance, the Digital Library of Georgia, the American Distance Education Consortium (ADEC), the Library of Congress, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), and Agricultural Research Service colleagues responsible for the ARS Image Gallery, GRIN, and other databases.

The site search uses the Explorit search technology from Deep Web Technologies, the search technology for www.science.gov.


PETER R. YOUNG
Director
National Agricultural Library

Information for this posting is quoted from a listserv posting to USAIN-L

February 22, 2007

Science.gov 4.0 Release

San Francisco---The latest version of Science.gov, launched February 16,2007 deploys "DeepRank" which allows search and relevancy ranking across full text of documents, when full text is available. In addition, Science.gov 4.0 adds a "refine results" option to narrow returns within a search, as well as an "email results" feature so that individuals may email important science information to themselves, friends and family, or colleagues. Version 4.0 offers more ways to view search results: by title, author or date, as well as by relevancy rank or source, as in earlier versions.

"Once again, Science.gov has brought new features and new technology to the forefront for those who need science information quickly," said Eleanor Frierson, Deputy Director, National Agricultural Library and co-chair of the Science.gov Alliance. "You get a lot of search with just one query, and your results are more relevant than ever."

Tom Lahr, Deputy Associate Chief Biologist for Information, U.S. Geological Survey, and co-chair of the Science.gov Alliance, noted that Version 4.0 will help citizens find the science information they need. "Already, Science.gov searches authoritative science information from 30 federal scientific databases and more than 1,800 science Web sites," said Lahr. "Now DeepRank, a more sophisticated ranking tool, will help return even more targeted results from these resources."

At Science.gov, a single query can be launched across more than 50 million pages of science information and research results. Science.gov allows users to search the surface Web as well as the deep Web, where traditional search engines typically cannot go. The information is free and no registration is required.

Hosted by the DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI, www.osti.gov), Science.gov is the gateway to reliable science and technology information from 16 organizations within 12 federal science agencies.

Science.gov is made possible by members of the Science.gov Alliance: the Departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Defense, Education, Energy, Health and Human Services, and the Interior, the Environmental Protection Agency, the Government Printing Office, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science Foundation, with support from the National Archives and Records Administration.

Science.gov is supported by CENDI (www.cendi.gov) an interagency working group of senior scientific and technical information managers from 12 U.S. federal agencies.

Information for this blog posting quoted directly from the press release send from:
NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:
Cathey Daniels, (865) 576-9539


February 19, 2007

OAIster Reaches 10 Million Records

"ANN ARBOR, Mich. - OAIster Reaches 10 Million Records.

We live in an information-driven world-- one in which access to good information defines success. OAIster's growth to 10 million records takes us one step closer to that goal.

Developed at the University of Michigan's Library, OAIster is a collection of digital scholarly resources. OAIster is also a service that continually gathers these digital resources to remain complete and fresh. As global digital repositories grow, so do OAIster's holdings.

Popular search engines don't have the holdings OAIster does. They crawl web pages and index the words on those pages. It's an outstanding technique for fast, broad information from public websites. But scholarly information, the kind researchers use to enrich their work, is generally hidden from these search engines."

Information for this posting is quoted from a Web4Lib posting

ANN ARBOR, Mich. - OAIster Reaches 10 Million Records.


We live in an information-driven world-- one in which access to good information defines success. OAIster's growth to 10 million records takes us one step closer to that goal.

Developed at the University of Michigan's Library, OAIster is a collection of digital scholarly resources. OAIster is also a service that continually gathers these digital resources to remain complete and fresh. As global digital repositories grow, so do OAIster's holdings.

Popular search engines don't have the holdings OAIster does. They crawl web pages and index the words on those pages. It's an outstanding technique for fast, broad information from public websites. But scholarly information, the kind researchers use to enrich their work, is generally hidden from these search engines.

OAIster retrieves these otherwise elusive resources by tapping directly into the collections of a variety of institutions using harvesting technology based on the Open Archives Initiative (OAI) Protocol for Metadata Harvesting. These can be images, academic papers, movies and audio files, technical reports, books, as well as preprints (unpublished works that have not yet been peer reviewed).
By aggregating these resources, OAIster makes it possible to search across all of them and return the results of a thorough investigation of complete, up-to-date resources.

Ann Devenish, Publication Services Project Manager at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, notes that "Harvesting by OAIster is a primary 'selling point' when we talk to scientists and researchers about the visibility, accessibility, and impact of their contributions in an institutional repository. From their own experiences they know that a search using one of the popular search engines can bring back thousands (if not, millions) of results which will require careful and time-consuming screening, with no guarantee that they will ever get to the content they seek. A search of OAIster, across hundreds of open and scholarly archives and millions of records, brings back results with the key metadata elements that allow for quick identification of, and easy navigation to, the content they seek."

OAIster is good news for the digital archives that contribute material to open-access repositories. "[OAIster has demonstrated that]...OAI interoperability can scale. This is good news for the technology, since the proliferation is bound to continue and even accelerate," says Peter Suber, author of the SPARC Open Access Newsletter. As open-access repositories proliferate, they will be supported by a single, well-managed, comprehensive, and useful tool.

Scholars will find that searching in OAIster can provide better results than searching in web search engines. Roy Tennant, User Services Architect at the California Digital Library, offers an
example: "In OAIster I searched 'roma' and 'world war,' then sorted by weighted relevance. The first hit nailed my topic-- the persecution of the Roma in World War II. Trying 'roma world war'
in Google fails miserably because Google apparently searches 'Rome'
as well as 'Roma.' The ranking then makes anything about the Roma people drop significantly, and there is nothing in the first few screens of results that includes the word in the title, unlike the OAIster hit."

OAIster currently harvests 730 repositories from 49 countries on 6 continents. In three years, it has more than quadrupled in size and increased from 6.2 million to 10 million in the past year. OAIster is a project of the University of Michigan Digital Library Production Service.

For more information about University of Michigan's OAIster Project, visit http://www.oaister.org/, or contact Kat Hagedorn at khage@umich.edu.


February 13, 2007

Google Co-op

Google has launched a new tool that allows users to customize the google search engine and select a collection of websites that they want to search. This allows you to handpick a collection of reliable websites to search for scientific information. This tool may be customized for a class topic or to specify when you are searching for a pic where you are lokely to receive false hits based on homonyms. You can specify if the sites you choose ar ethe only ones you want Google to search or if you want them to have the highest ranking in a normal Google search. You can also exclude sites from your customized search engine.

Some interesting examples include Mrs. Gray's Research Sites for Kids

Useful ChemProject

Google Co-op Featured Examples http://www.google.com/coop/cse/examples/GooglePicks

Instructions for setting up your own custom search engine are available here http://google.com/coop/cse/. Users must register with Google

Information for this blog posting provided by Joanna Blair.

Entry edited to remove broken links 21 March 2007

February 06, 2007

Plant Management Network Online Resources

The Plant Management Network (PMN) Database provides full-text access to several publications including the Biological and Cultural Tests for Control of Plant Diseases. Quoting from their Website, "Welcome to B&C Tests Online. Biological and Cultural Tests for Control of Plant Diseases is published annually by The American Phytopathological Society utilizing volunteer authors and editors and APS staff. It is intended to serve plant pathologists, nematologists, agronomists, horticulturists, foresters, extension specialists and agents, consultants, and others submitting or needing information on current plant disease control results."

The PMN also provides access to Fungicide and Nematicide Tests. Quoting from their Website, "Published annually, F&N Tests provides fungicide data from the following crops: pome fruits; stone fruits and nuts; small fruits; vegetables; cereal and forage crops; field crops; turfgrass; ornamentals and trees; citrus, tropical, and miscellaneous crops, as well as seed treatments and nematicides from all crops; plus a comprehensive list of the active ingredients and common names of the products listed in the section entitled “Materials Under Trial."

Access to PMN is restricted to CSU faculty, staff, and students.